Steve Sanford
Well-known member
John Sheaff came by today to leave me with this nice old shovin' oar. John is a former teacher from Baldwin, LI, and was once President of the South Shore Waterfowlers Association. He was the long-time emcee of the old U S National Decoy Show. By coincidence, we are neighbors here in dairy country.
John and his brother Dave got the oar back in 1959 or so with a duckboat that might have been built by Frank Carman or Frank Abel (Able?) - both boatbuilders from the south shore of Long Island. John hunted in Merrick; Carman was probably somewhere between Seaford and Amityville, and Abel was probably from Oceanside (any better information is always welcome). The boat was stolen the week before the 1961 duck season opened - but the shovin' oar has been around ever since. John brought it to me for a "good home".
The oar is beautifully crafted - to fairly light scantlings. She is 9'6" LOA. I have not yet weighed it - but the wood looks like Ash to my eye.
The handle is finished like paddle - a detail I have not seen before on such oars.
The blade is slim and tapered. Useful for shoving on a hard bottom and with just enough blade to serve as a rudder once you had some headway,
I am not sure what to do. My instinct is always to put gear back into serviceable condition - which would involve a quick sanding with 80-grit, a couple of saturating coats of linseed oil on the starved wood, and then a coat or 2 of duckboat paint. On the other hand, I have always used a duck-billed (Herters) head on my pushpole - which is mostly just to maneuver my Sneakbox into deep water or around the launch. And, perhaps I should regard it as an antique and just clean off some of the surface mildew and put her up in the rafters for posterity.
Any thoughts on the maker - and how I should proceed - are welcome.
All the best,
SJS
John and his brother Dave got the oar back in 1959 or so with a duckboat that might have been built by Frank Carman or Frank Abel (Able?) - both boatbuilders from the south shore of Long Island. John hunted in Merrick; Carman was probably somewhere between Seaford and Amityville, and Abel was probably from Oceanside (any better information is always welcome). The boat was stolen the week before the 1961 duck season opened - but the shovin' oar has been around ever since. John brought it to me for a "good home".
The oar is beautifully crafted - to fairly light scantlings. She is 9'6" LOA. I have not yet weighed it - but the wood looks like Ash to my eye.
The handle is finished like paddle - a detail I have not seen before on such oars.
The blade is slim and tapered. Useful for shoving on a hard bottom and with just enough blade to serve as a rudder once you had some headway,
I am not sure what to do. My instinct is always to put gear back into serviceable condition - which would involve a quick sanding with 80-grit, a couple of saturating coats of linseed oil on the starved wood, and then a coat or 2 of duckboat paint. On the other hand, I have always used a duck-billed (Herters) head on my pushpole - which is mostly just to maneuver my Sneakbox into deep water or around the launch. And, perhaps I should regard it as an antique and just clean off some of the surface mildew and put her up in the rafters for posterity.
Any thoughts on the maker - and how I should proceed - are welcome.
All the best,
SJS